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‘Cocaine’ll Turn You Into A Damn Owl, Homie’: Theo Von’s Historic Interview With Trump Is A Must-Watch

Comedian Theo Von released an interview with former President Donald Trump on Tuesday in which he may have unwittingly engaged in one of the most influential conversations ever to come into the 2024 election — maybe in modern history.

If someone had told me a year ago that I would be spending an evening watching Theo Von conduct one of the most humane operas around. Informative interview If you're former president and current 2024 presidential candidate Donald Trump, you probably think you're living in a parallel universe. But on Tuesday night, that's exactly what happened.

Sitting between them at Morgan Wallen's Lil' T, Trump and Von spoke about everything from pop culture to martial arts, addiction and Vice President Kamala Harris' campaign. Former cocaine addictPresident Trump has laid out a set of policies that would fundamentally solve the massive social crises facing America, make the coming financial crisis much easier to weather, and, dare I say, give us a little more of what makes other countries great.

Before Fong's interview, I had no idea that Trump was trying to force hospitals to display their prices, a move that would give Americans greater power over their health care costs, the most serious form of debt and the cause of millions of premature deaths each year. All the hate heaped on Trump during the pandemic suddenly made sense to my ignorant mind. He put people and their health over profits.

Trump also said he would move litigation to a loser-pays process, to put it simply. As an immigrant in the US who is very familiar with the law, I have always mocked how Americans are more likely to sue those who have wronged them than to deal with them as adults. Of course, there are many situations where litigation is necessary, but you are playing around with it as if it will make litigation obsolete. If Trump could implement this system, I think it would save a ton of money, anger and time negotiating with lawyers. Europe has a similar process and it works well. (RELATED: 'That's my son': Vance's mother spotted in teary-eyed in Republican National Convention crowd)

With just these two major policy concepts, Trump not only fixed two of the most corrupt systems in the modern world — the law and health care — but he also showed us where his true focus as a presidential candidate lies: solving real American problems, not the corporations that are creating dystopias.

And he did it in a way that Americans of all ages and demographics could understand. Trump came across as the kind of president you'd want to have a beer with, even if you don't drink alcohol. But it wouldn't be a party beer. It wouldn't be an intoxicating beer, it would be a hearty therapeutic beer to lighten the load of chaos.

Fung clearly did his homework before this interview. His questions and conversation were perfect for highlighting Trump's truly personal and human side. I hope more liberals will watch the show to the end with an open mind and ask themselves how many times have they heard a politician seriously ask an interviewer if they were OK, or cared about the question they were asking? (RELATED: 'The country should be proud of him': Trump speaks about Teo Fung and Elon Musk)

Vuong brought out a side of Trump that I would like to see the world see more often: He's not only a businessman and a politician, he's a father and a family man first and foremost, and I think all he wants for all Americans is to cherish their families, love them, protect them from evil, and see them prosper, just as he would his own.

I'm so glad that Trump listened to his son, Barron, and had him on the show, and I'm so glad that Dana White set it up. (RELATED: Kamala's first unscripted comments as candidate are an unrestrained tirade)

Hopefully Harris will follow suit. Maybe she won't be on Vuong's podcast. Maybe she should appear on Call Her Daddy and talk about her career successes and how she plans to finally address the issues she hasn't addressed in the last four years.

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